A Dream Team gets a lot of attention. A Dream Team brings together the best players all at once, from all different directions. A Dream Team has a swagger and makes a lot of noise. The Philadelphia Eagles are officially the NFL’s Dream Team now, a label that will stick in good times and, if there are any, bad.

So maybe this is about your definition of Dream Team, or about whether a Dream Team is the same thing as a championship team in football. But the Best Team is still the Green Bay Packers.

They are so well-built, so solid. People are forgetting them because they’ve been so quiet in the offseason. Can you name one free agent they’ve signed? Generally, they don’t sign them. They don’t need them.

And that’s because this team is built on great draft choices and scouting, not to mention a quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, who was developed perfectly.

Also, they are the defending Super Bowl champions. The Packers might not be the Dream Team, but they are the real dream.

OK, so the Packers did sign free agent receiver James Jones, who was already a Packer. But that counts. And for all the Plaxicos and Ochocincos in the world, the ones who got all the headlines and ESPN chatter, the Packers might still have the best receiving corps in the NFL. They also have rookie receiver Randall Cobb, already sparking practices.

Look, if you’re an Eagles fan, you should be thrilled. Your team is going for it. Your front office has easily been the most prepared to act quickly, and intelligently, in this mad-dash signing period that the lockout created.

The Eagles might well win the Super Bowl. But there is something about the Packers’ demeanor now, as opposed to the Eagles’.

The Eagles are dancing in the end zone. The Packers are acting like they’ve been there before.

Can you just piece together a champion the way the Eagles are doing? Or is there something about playing together, being a team?

There isn’t just one right way to build a champion. If you get all the best players, then you have to like your chances. But we’ve seen that fail, too. The original Dream Team, with Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird was just too good to lose. But plenty of U.S. Olympic Dream Teams lost after that, even with the best talent.

Are we sure the Eagles are a Dream Team and not the Miami Heat? Maybe Michael Vick is LeBron James.

Already, after the Eagles signed stud cornerbacks Nnamdi Asomugha and Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, the stud cornerback they already had, Asante Samuel has hurt feelings.

“I want to be where I’m wanted,’’ he said, after missing the first few days of camp, excused. “If I’m not appreciated here, life goes on. I move on.’’

Meanwhile, Eagles receiver DeSean Jackson, surely watching the team throw money to other players, would like some himself. He has been a holdout.

And what about Vick? Is he really an accurate enough thrower to win a Super Bowl? The pressure is on him, now. Instead of being a great comeback story, he now needs to win. The Chicago Bears stopped him last year by keeping him in front of them, making him roll out and throw accurately over speedy linebackers.

It didn’t work.

This isn’t to say that the Eagles won’t win. It’s just to suggest that while people celebrate the way they were assembled, it is really the Packers who have been put together ideally.

It’s one draft choice after another on the field. By contrast, the team they beat the NFC title game last year, the Bears, now have just one first-round draft choice left on the team from GM Jerry Angelo’s regime. That’s not counting this year’s pick. And Chris Williams has only been OK for the Bears.

Last year, the Packers scouted so well that after a few injuries got in the way, they had Frank Zombo, an undrafted free agent rookie from Central Michigan, starting at linebacker in the Super Bowl. Undrafted free agent cornerback Sam Shields had two interceptions and a sack, and forced a fumble, in the NFC Championship Game.

And for all the heat they took at the time for dumping Brett Favre, the timing was perfect for Rodgers’ development. He has become a star.

The Eagles are piecing together a Dream, but the Packers have been together, worked together, fought together, won together. They haven’t made any noise ... since winning it all.